Daily Historical Volatility 20 data from Pineify's TradingView Alert pipeline

Historical Volatility Screener

Scan stocks, major crypto pairs, and ETFs with daily Historical Volatility 20 readings. Search a covered Symbol or switch market collections to compare the latest reported values.

Daily Historical Volatility 20 values4 market collectionsSearch and filter8 timeframe columns

Historical Volatility 20 Market Snapshot

0 Symbols

Public page data is daily only. Shorter timeframes open in the App.

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Pineify shows the latest daily values reported through its TradingView Alert pipeline. This page does not recalculate the indicator in the browser. It is an information tool, not investment advice.

What Historical Volatility 20 measures

Historical Volatility measures the standard deviation of 20 one bar log returns. Its rank compares the current value with the same symbol's latest 100 bars.

Calculation

Pineify receives the reported indicator fields from its TradingView Alert pipeline. The calculation follows this method:

Historical Volatility 20 = standard deviation of ln(close / prior close) over 20 bars x 100. This value is per bar and is not annualized.

The page leaves missing readings unavailable. It does not fill a gap with an estimate or a browser-side calculation.

How to use this scan

At Pineify, we use this screen as a watchlist check, not as a trade instruction. Use the raw value and rank to find symbols entering a different volatility regime before choosing position size or setup type.

  1. 1We start in All, then search a liquid reference such as AAPL, SPY, or BTCUSDT.
  2. 2We compare the Historical Volatility 20 reading with other Symbols in the same market collection.
  3. 3We open the chart to confirm price structure and volume before making a decision.
Compare shorter timeframes

Reading the Historical Volatility 20 signals

Read the value in context. A single daily result can narrow the list, but it cannot replace a chart review.

1

A larger raw value means returns varied more on the displayed timeframe.

2

A high rank means volatility is high relative to this symbol's latest 100 bars.

3

A low rank means volatility is low relative to this symbol's own recent history.

Where the signal can fail

The raw value is not annualized and should not be compared directly across different timeframes. Rank is not a cross sectional market ranking.

Historical Volatility 20 cannot predict future prices. Confirm the setup and define your risk before acting.

Markets in this Historical Volatility 20 scan

All combines Pineify's four default Screener collections. A Symbol that belongs to more than one collection appears once in All and stays available in each matching tab.

Top US Stocks

Widely followed US companies from the current default stock list.

Crypto Majors

Major crypto pairs covered by the Pineify Alert feed.

Hot Markets

Stocks, funds, and crypto pairs in the current hot-market list.

Index ETFs

Index, sector, bond, commodity, and thematic exchange-traded funds.

Data and cache method

This public endpoint requests daily Historical Volatility 20 data and caches each indicator response for up to four hours. Seven shorter timeframes stay locked on the public page and are available in the full Pineify Screener after sign-in.

Read the Pineify Screener method and feature guide for the full workflow behind collections, timeframes, and technical signals.

Historical Volatility Screener FAQ

What does the Historical Volatility Screener show?+

Historical Volatility measures the standard deviation of 20 one bar log returns. Its rank compares the current value with the same symbol's latest 100 bars. This page checks that indicator across Pineify's default stocks, crypto pairs, and ETF collections so you can narrow a watchlist without opening each chart first.

How should I read the Historical Volatility 20 result?+

A larger raw value means returns varied more on the displayed timeframe. Treat the daily reading as a starting point, then compare it with price structure, volume, and your own risk rules.

Can Historical Volatility 20 predict the next price move?+

No. Historical Volatility 20 is calculated from reported market data and cannot predict the next move or guarantee a profitable trade. It can help you sort a watchlist for further research.

What timeframe does the Historical Volatility Screener use?+

This public page shows daily data only. Each visible Historical Volatility 20 reading comes from the latest daily snapshot returned by Pineify's TradingView Alert pipeline.

Why are the shorter timeframes locked?+

The public page requests the daily timeframe only. Sign in and open Pineify Screener to view 4-hour, 2-hour, 1-hour, 30-minute, 15-minute, 5-minute, and 1-minute readings.

How often is the Historical Volatility 20 data refreshed?+

The public API caches each indicator response for up to four hours. The table shows when its current cached response was created, although the underlying daily bar may be older when a market is closed.

Need more than daily Historical Volatility 20 data?

The full Screener adds seven shorter timeframes, the complete technical indicator library, and editable Symbol collections.

Open the full Screener

Pineify provides this page for technical research and education. It is not investment advice, and no indicator can guarantee a trading result.